The roadmap is based on a bottom-up approach that suggests providing businesses with tools to prepare for future requirements before adopting any laws.
Ukraine’s Ministry of Digital Transformation presented its regulatory roadmap for artificial intelligence (AI) on Oct. 7. The roadmap was published on the ministry’s website and states that it aims to help local companies prepare for adopting a law analogous to the European Union’s AI Act. It also seeks to educate citizens on protecting themselves from AI risks.
According to the roadmap’s announcement, it is based on a bottom-up approach that suggests moving from less to more, and it will provide businesses with tools to prepare for future requirements before adopting any laws.
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The roadmap sets a preliminary period to allow the companies to adapt to potential laws in the next two to three years. Deputy Minister of Digital Transformation Oleksandr Borniakov outlines:
“We plan to create a culture of business self-regulation in several ways. In particular, by signing voluntary codes of conduct that will testify to companies’ ethical use of AI by companies. Another tool is a White Paper that will familiarise businesses with the approach, timing, and stages of regulatory implementation.”
The draft of the Ukrainian AI legislation, according to the roadmap, is expected in 2024, but no sooner than the EU’s AI Act to allow the national law will take it into account.
In June, the EU AI Act passed the European Parliament. Once implemented, the act would prohibit certain AI services and products while limiting or restricting others.
Among the technologies outright banned are biometric surveillance, social scoring systems, predictive policing, so-called “emotion recognition,” and untargeted facial recognition systems. Generative AI models, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard, would be allowed to operate if their outputs were labeled as AI-generated.